Why You Should Start Marketing Before Writing Any Single Line Of Code

This blogpost is part of the series: ‘My Challenge: From Service Business to Product Business in 1 Year‘. You can read the full series here, or you can read this as a stand alone post.

Last blogpost was about “finding a pain“. I described why it is important to start from an existing pain point in a market and solve that, instead of starting from your own “next great idea”. I also described how I did cold call many people from different niche markets to come up with a very concrete list of pain points that people would like to get rid of in exchange for $$$.

But once you have identified a pain point worth solving, how do you know for sure that you will be able to market your product? How can you reach your market?

Even the best product in the world that is saving your customers hours of time per week or making them an extra thousand dollars per month is worth NOTHING if you can not reach your market in an easy and a cost effective way.

Let’s say that a typical price for a SaaS product is 20$ per month. Then obviously, we need a lot of users if we want to live from it. Ideally, we need a scalable marketing. We don’t want to go knock the door of our customers and ask if we can give them a demo of our product, in the hope that they would sign up. That is half a day of effort per potential customer. That’s not scalable. Even more: it would cost us money. If 1/10 customers we visit would eventually sign up, then we would need to spend 5 full days of effort for 1 customer, worth 20$ per month (1/10 customers * 2/day = 0,2 customers / day => 1 customer / 5 days)! Not so profitable…

So our challenge: given a pain point that a niche market wants to get rid of in return for $$$, are we able to reach that market in a cheap and easy way?

As always, the key is the same: don’t invest tons of time and effort into building your product before having a proof in hand that you will succeed. That also means: succeeding in marketing your (future) product. There is a great blogpost by Rob Walling, a bootstrapper I look up to, called “Why You Should Start Marketing The Day You Start Coding“. I would change this to: “Why You Should Start Marketing Before Writing Any Single Line Of Code“.

We want to measure and proof that we can reach a lot of people in our market with reasonable effort. We want some evidence that within a few days, we could easily reach about 100 very interested people.

Coming soon.

The typical way to do this is to set up a “coming soon page” where interested people can leave their email adres. This is a page announcing your product, what pain it will solve and giving people the option to leave their email adress in case they want to stay informed.

Such a landing page is a wonderful thing! It allows you to invest barely nothing, but measure demand and lets you test if you can actually market your (future) product. People have to get their kids from school, answer emails, go to the fitness, cook, shop, work, pick up phones or visit their grandma. If – despite all of this – they take the time and effort to read your page and leave their email adress to a total stranger, then they are interested in your product, no?

Our coming soon page as an example.

I want to share our landing page with you. So I actually need to reveal our product/niche/pain solver right now :-)

Finally” I hear you thinking.

Here we go…

One of the niche markets we have been calling are architects. Why? They are traveling a lot between construction sites, so web and mobile technology could come in handy for them. We can easily identify, isolate and target them, so that means easy to market (e.g. there are blogs for architects, email lists of architects, LinkedIn groups for architects, …). A typical architect has a decent profit margin, on average they don’t make loss, so they have some money to invest to improve their workflow (transport business for example is much less profitable). They sell their time (per hour, or fixed price per project), so time is money for them. If we can save them a few hours per week or per month, that is worth a lot for them.

(Note: there are tons of niche markets with the same characteristics. Pick one and start calling today if you are serious about starting a business!)

So we called a lot of architects asking what pain points they have. What is irritating them on a daily basis?

It turned out that the administrative duties, the time lost and the headaches related to making and sending out site reports keep them busy at night. Architects have to visit all of their construction sites on a weekly basis. They look for mistakes during construction, the status of the construction site, if we are on schedule or not, improvements since last time, and so on. Then they take pictures with their camera, they make notes on paper, they sketch on their plans. Sometimes they visit 4 sites per day. When they arrive at the office, they open MS Word (which is a pain point on its own), and start typing out all the notes (again!), importing the related pictures from their camera via USB (!) and scanning the plans and sketches in order to import them in MS Word. Eventually, after some hours spent, they have their reports ready and can send them out.

A lot of them told us literally that they would pay for a solution to get rid of this administration.

I smell a pain to be solved ;-)

And so, we did come up with the name “ArchiSnapper”, and we did build our coming soon page. There you are:

http://beta.archisnapper.com/

Some facts:

  • The coming soon page is hosted for free on Heroku. Cost: $0.
  • The page uses the free and open source front end framework Bootstrap. Cost: $0.
  • Even the icon and the logo come from Bootstrap as well. Cost: $0. Time spent on the logo: 15 minutes
  • Time spent on the page: between half a day and a day.
  • Time spent on finding a name: 30 minutes.

=> REMEMBER, WE ARE JUST MEASURING OUR CHANCES TO SUCCESS. NO NEED TO SPEND MORE TIME, MONEY AND EFFORT FOR NOW! We do this by attaching the most difficult parts of a startup FIRST. Building a product is easy. Designing a logo is easy. Marketing it and getting paid for something really not, so do that first. You know you can manage the easy and fun part later on!

Then, we did send out this coming soon page to about 200 architects by email asking their feedback, we did set up some Adwords and we left some comments on some blogs, forums or LinkedIn groups for architects with a back link.

And guess what?

Within reasonable amount of time (24 hours) and with little effort, we had 10 sign ups already. And counting!

10 sign ups on a coming soon page sounds like worth nothing compared to Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and the next hype. But actually it is worth A LOT. It means so much. Given the little time and effort spent, 10 sign ups is huuuuuuge. If with little effort and no product in hand we can get 10 sign ups, then just imagine how much sign ups we could get with decent marketing effort and a well developed product.

We continued our marketing efforts for a little more, to get some more evidence of success. Once we did hit 100 sign ups, we decided to start building a first prototype. Today, we have over 1,000 architects signed up to our beta page.

Hey…one more thing….if you like this blog and you want to say thanks in return, just tweet or like or share this blogpost. Or follow me on http://twitter.com/pietereer for more updates or for occasional nonsense like a picture of my dinner via Instagram.

Bye “Google Reader”, Hello “The Old Reader”

Google Reader users, time is ticking. The first of July, Google Reader will discontinue. I have been looking around for a decent alternative. Decent for me means: a normal reader. Not a “fancy” thing that tries to take decisions on your behalf on what posts are important, which picture to show as a cover, how to display and organise information or tries to be smarter than an airplane cockpit. Feedly and many others try to do this, but they are confusing me more then anything else. I will decide myself which information is important.

The Old Reader (http://theoldreader.com/) did it right for me. Simple, clean, minimal. Not too fancy, not too smart. I think it’s the closest to the real Google Reader. And it allows to import your Google Reader account so you can continue reading without interruption.

Oh, btw, when migrating away from Google Reader, don’t forget to take my RSS feed with you. I’ll continue blogging on my challenge “From Service Business To Product Business In 1 Year“, so stay tuned! You can find my RSS feed here: http://feeds.feedburner.com/HetVerhaalVanMijnWebStartup

How solving a real pain makes us already $1000 a month, even before the big launch

This blogpost is part of the series: ‘My Challenge: From Service Business to Product Business in 1 Year‘. You can read the full series here, or you can read this as a stand alone post.

Conclusion after last blogpost in the “service to product challenge” was:

Between today and september 2013, we have to find a pain that we can solve with software, and for which 200 people in this world are willing to pay $50 a month (=$10K per month recurring).

This blogpost is about “find a pain” in the above statement.

Actually I have some good news (at least for myself and the rest of the company). We are now making almost $1000 a month on automated recurring revenue with our product that is still in private beta. Yes, you did read this right. We didn’t do the ‘big launch’ and we are already making $1000 of monthly recurring revenue! 10% of our target is reached! Yay. The reason why we achieved this has mostly to do with the rest of this blogpost. So please read the rest of this rather long post if you are serious on bootstrapping a software product business.

Finding the pain

The first step and probably the most important step for any startup: finding a pain. Finding a problem. Finding headaches of your future customers. Don’t come up with an “idea” without having identified a clear, burning, irritating pain or frustration for a certain niche market. A lot of startups fail because they have a brilliant idea, a so called solution, that is actually not solving a real pain point. Finding a pain point in a market is one of the most important steps. If you find a very frustrating pain, selling software that solves that pain will be easy (please read that blogpost if you didn’t – and this one). However, if you come up with a “solution” for something that is actually not a problem for no one, you are putting a lot of time, energy, caffeine, nightly overwork and health into something without any evidence it would actually sell. Good luck selling software that nobody is waiting for!

How do you know a pain is worth writing software for?

Exactly.

If there are people willing to pay for a it!

Think about this: Every day there are hundreds of people quitting there job, investing their savings, working 70 hours per week, drinking liters of coffee per day and giving up sleep, risking their reputation, taking credit, working 6 months 7 days a week 12 hours per day on their idea …. all without knowing if there are people that would actually pay them soon or late for what they are building.

HOW CRAZY!

(I know, because I can tell you from experience)

So, how did we find a pain out of thin air, worth writing software for? How did we know for sure that we would not spend 6 months of our time, energy, hard work, sweat, tears, discussions, meetings and endless debugging sessions on something that nobody would every buy?

Well, we used a very sophisticated and special tool to collect information and feedback: our mouth and our 2 ears. We called around until we did find 10 people who told us literally that they would pay us to get rid of problem XYZ.

This is the step where it goes wrong so many times. People prefer to stick to their original great solution or billion dollar idea (born in their head instead of during conversations with customers). They spend all their time building their idea, instead of validating their idea first. They prefer to dive into the code immediately, spending all their time and energy on fancy ajax, clean code, a trendy logo, a responsive site and a cool company name. Designing a logo and brainstorming on a company name is far more fun than cold calling people asking if they have time for you to talk about their pain points.

People are scared of be proven wrong. They are scared that their billion dollar idea turns out to be not so great after all. And so they postpone the crucial confrontation: “WILL SOMEBODY PAY FOR THIS?”. By all means they focus on everything except asking people if they would pay for their solution.

Auwch…

Tackle the most difficult thing first. You have to do it anyway. So why not start with it? You know you can build software, and make your site responsive. You know for sure you can come up with a fancy company name and logo (or hire someone to do that for you). But are you so certain you’ll find at least 10 people willing to pay for your product? Tackle that first!

1 mouth, 2 ears and 1 phone…

So, there we go. Our approach was the following:

  1. call people to ask what their pains/problems in their business are
  2. find a common and recurring pain in a niche market for which people are willing to pay
  3. write software to solve that pain
  4. get paid with a 99% certainty once the first version of the software is ready

During 1 month, we have been calling over 500 people from different niche markets, asking what their pains are and if they would pay to get rid of them.

This was a typical start of a phone conversation:

Hello, I am Pieter from Zorros. We build software for businesses like yours. These days we are writing software to improve the business of [doctors/nurses/industrial cleaners/dentists/music teachers/construction business/…]. I’m calling you to hear from you if there are any pain points in your business. Any frustrations, any issues, any time consuming and administrative tasks that ruin your day? Would you have 10 minutes to talk about that with me? That would be helpful to build the software in the right shape…

We called people from different niche markets. Like doctors, vets, teachers, lawyers, researchers, dentists, construction companies and so on. Our criteria for the markets or industries were:

  • It had to be a niche market.
  • We wanted to think wider than the typical developers target markets. We don’t need another another Twitter client or another project management software. Here is a list of 100 Twitter clients. Good luck competing in such a crowded market.
  • It had to be B2B. No B2C. Businesses know how important is it to cut costs by 10%, to get 20% increase in revenue, or to save 10 hours per week. They will actually pay a lot of money if you software can do any of those.
  • We would need to be able to reach our market online. That means: via (a combination of) blogs, twitter, email, community sites, facebook, or anything related. Offline marketing is much more difficult and less scalable. 60 year old yoga teachers is not an easy niche to market to, following these criteria.
  • We had to be able to reach the business owner/boss directly and solve his/her problem. If the boss (the one with the credit card) and the person for who you solve the problem are not the same, it’s more difficult to sell, since it will be less clear for the boss why he would actually need to pull out his credit card.

And so we started calling randomly through those niches, looking for pain.

Of course, as you can imagine lots of people told us that they don’t have time for strangers calling them. Which might actually be true if you run a business, have children, need to go to the store or are in the traffic jam! But a big portion of them were quite happy that there is someone caring about their business and listening to their frustrations or pain points. Lots of people love complaining about their problems or frustrations.

At the end of the conversation, ask them if they would be willing to pay for any software that could reduce their pain. This is crucial. If they are not ready to pay you for a solution, then very likely the problem is not big enough for them. Be sure to have at least around 10 people from a certain industry telling you literally over the phone that they would pay for a software to get rid of problem X.

Being featured on TechCrunch, having a nice logo, 1000 likes on your Facebook page or your friends telling you that you have a fantastic idea sounds great. But after that, nobody cares. Really not! The only thing that matters is 10 people telling you directly that they would pay for your software.

If you can find 10, then you can find more. For sure. No software has a million users the day after launch. They start with 1. And then 2. And then 5, 10. And so on. So why don’t you start with getting 10 concrete confirmations over the phone? In stead of just dreaming of a few thousand users?

Most startups have zero people willing to pay them when they start coding. Be smarter and get at least 10 before you start coding.

Here some numbers and facts:

  • We did around 500 cold calls in 10 niche markets.
  • I estimate that more or less 150 of them actually wanted to talk to us, the rest thought we were selling something, thought it was a joke, or had no time.
  • The first 20 calls were the most difficult. It gets much better after a while. Get used to it.
  • We quickly got a spreadsheet full of potential problems to solve with software, about 100 ideas. Once people start complaining, they complain about everything. A great source of ideas!
  • It’s not easy to extract pains from people. Often they can’t immediately tell what are their problems, since they are so used to how things are going since years.
  • Only a fraction of the 100 ideas were big pains and recurring problems that were mentioned over and over again. About 15 of them. The rest were less relevant problems or were only for one person.
  • We called for about a month.
  • Our phone bill was high. But I prefer a high phone bill over months of sweat, hard work and building something nobody is waiting for.
  • So, at the end of the 500 calls, we had around 15 concrete ideas for software, where each time at least 10 people confirmed literally that they would pay money for software that could solve that problem.

Now, ain’t that nice?

EVEN BEFORE WRITING ANY SINGLE LETTER OF CODE, JUST USING OUR 2 EARS AND 1 MOUTH (and a lot of patience and listening), WE FOUND 15 CONCRETE SOFTWARE IDEAS FOR WHICH WE ALREADY HAVE A LIST OF CLIENTS THAT CONFIRMED THEY WOULD PAY US.

We are now in (paying) beta with our software, and we actually make $940 per month of recurring revenue. We didn’t even launch in big. We launched in silence for a small group of people that subscribed to the “keep me posted page” (more on that in the next blogpost). I’m sure that most of the success is directly related to the fact that we started from problem, instead of starting from our own idea.

So, Pieter, will you finally tell me what software you are writing?

I know. You want to know what software we are working on. But I first want to launch “in big” before actually announcing it here on my blog. However, the actual techniques and figures shared here on the blog are far more important than the software we are working on. It does not matter which software we write. It matters that you get the “problem first” approach right.

You get my word: later through the blog post series, once live, I’ll announce the actual name of the software. So if that name matters to you, stay tuned!

(Pssst….if you like this blog post series and you want to say thanks, just tweet or like or share this blogpost.)

Startups 101 – What I Learned The Hard Way

Ahoy there!

Yesterday I gave a presentation on what I learned over the past 3 years as a starting entrepreneur, called “Startups 101 – What I Learned The Hard Way“. The presentation is for people who are about to start a business, who recently started a business, or who run a business but work hard for little money and are not scaling well.

It focusses on entrepreneurship, startups, bootstrapping in general, with a little more focus on products, software and SaaS business here and there.

Let me know what you think of it!

Next week I’ll continue my blog post series ‘From Service To Product Business In 1 Year‘, where I describe in detail every step we take in launching our own product(s) with a strong focus on automated recurring revenue. Stay tuned.

The mental switch – From Service Business to Product Business in 1 Year

This blogpost is part of the series: “My Challenge: From Service Business to Product Business in 1 Year“. You can read the full series here, or you can read this as a stand alone post.

After I published last weeks blogpost about my challenge to be break even on products in 1 year, many people asked me: “So, what is your great idea?“. Well, I have to disappoint you guys and gals. A startup is not about a great idea. Nobody will pay for your idea. People pay you for a solution for their problem. We will come to that in a future blogpost about idea extraction. There I will reveal my idea, explain how I got to that idea, and show you how you can find a problem for which people are willing to pay money if you take away their pain. In this blogpost, I want to focus on something more important than the actual idea: the right mindset. This might be an eye opener for some of you.

In order to succeed in a product business, you will have to spend a lot of time upfront. On short term, this time will have no return. In other words: you are putting time into something without being paid for it. You will NOT be paid for building your product, for the time you spend in the idea extraction or for calling potential customers asking for feedback on your first version. Even worse: you will loose money! Since every minute spent on your product is a minute that you can not spend on billable projects or on your job, it is a complete upfront investment of your time. But you will have to go through this investment if you want to get at the other side. There is no other way. All the successes you see in the world are a result of an upfront time investment. If you are serious on launching your product business, you have to give up some things now in order to be better off later. And you have to act on it. Now.

Trading time for money is like smoking: it’s an addiction. And the longer you smoke, the more difficult it is to stop. Or in other words: the sooner you stop smoking, the more easy it is to succeed. So it is ALWAYS BETTER TO STOP TODAY THAN TO STOP TOMORROW. By postponing, you make it more difficult for yourself. And between you and me, how silly is it to take the most difficult path? I’m a lazy person, so I take the path of the least resistance. The same way, as your service business is growing, as you earn more in your service business, you get more and more used to it, you get used to the salary, to the way of working, to your certainty, you hire more employees and you rent bigger offices. Day after day, it is becoming more difficult to take the switch. Therefore: act now, not tomorrow.

As soon as you realize that (1) you have to go through it in order to succeed and (2) you better act now than tomorrow, your eyes are opening.

So let’s take action! Make things concrete, tangible. Best is to set a (relatively) short term and realistic goal.

NOT: I want to be the next Facebook in 10 years from now.
BUT: I want to get $1.000 in recurring revenue from my product in 4 months from now.

If you can get to $1.000 monthly recurring in 4 months, you can as well get to $5.000 in 12 months, no? And to $20K in 2 years, no? Set clear financial, short term and tangible goals. In our Ruby on Rails and mobile agency Zorros, this translates to the following:

  • We decided we want $10K automated recurring revenue from our products by September 2013. This is maybe not enough to be break even, but as said above: if we can get 10K, we can as well get 20K, 30K or 50K. It’s a matter of time.
  • In order to achieve this goal, we decided to spend between 25% and 50% of our time on products, not on service business.
  • Why a minimum of 25%? Since less than that is just procrastination of the switch. Why a maximum of 50%? Since we are still working on exciting projects that we want to finish decently. We are not stopping service business overnight, we want to keep on delivering good quality and we will even accept new nice projects.
  • We treat our products as other projects: we plan them in, we use the same tools, the same quality, the same way of working. Except: nobody is paying us for that.
  • That is an immediate cut in revenue of 25% – 50%.
  • So I made a calculation of our survival time. What if the product would bring in 0$ and we would spend 50% of our time on products? How long would we survive without going bankrupt? What is our deadline?
  • The combination of the cash we had at the bank, and the most pessimistic scenario of 50% cut in revenue gave the answer. Let’s work out a fictive example:
  • Let’s say that normally, we make $25K of revenue per month for trading time for money. Let’s say also that our monthly costs are $20K (mainly wages, in a software service business, employees are the highest cost). That means that we have a $5K of profit per month if we spend 100% of our time on service business.
  • Let’s assume we have $100K of savings  / cash in our bank.
  • Now, we are going to have a serious cut in revenue: 50% of our time is spent in non billable things like building the product, research for the right product/market fit, calling clients, cold calling, emailing, … So, our monthly service revenue goes from $25K to $12.5K, while our costs stay at $20K. That means: in stead of a $5K profit per month, we make a $7.5K loss per month from now on.
  • With $100K on our bank account, and with the assumption that our product brings in $0 (so, our product would be a complete disaster, worst case), it means that we have survival period of 100/7.5 or 13,3 months. For easy calculation, let’s make this 12 months.
  • This means: we have 12 months where we can spend 50% of our time in building a product. In the worst case, the product brings in $0 by then, and we have to stop everything and we need to start spending 100% of our time again on service business or we are bankrupt. In the best case, the product by then brings in $10K of revenue, enough to become break even.

Such a concrete target makes everything very tangible and real. It forces us to get real, to take action, to forget about business cards, shiny logo’s, and going viral, but to focus on the most important:

Between today and september 2013, we have to find a pain that we can solve, and for which 200 people in this whole d@mn world are willing to pay $50 a month. We will spend 25% – 50% of our time on that.

200 people in this world that will pay $50 per month…if you look at it that way, it’s quite a feasible challenge, isn’t it? Yay!

What is next?

  • In the next blogposts I will go through the idea extraction process (how to find a pain for which people are willing to pay to get rid of it)
  • I will talk about landing pages and pre-subscriptions in order to get customers even before your product is launched
  • I will talk about the importance of mailing lists
  • I will reveal the product we are working on – wow
  • I will give financial details on our monthly recurring revenue
  • …and much more

Stay tuned!

Hey, by the way…it takes me quite some time to write all this. It would take you a minute to tweet or share or like this blogpost. I owe you some karma if you do so, thanks!

My Challenge: From Service Business to Product Business in 1 Year.

My Ruby on Rails and mobile agency Zorros was born in August 2010. We build web and mobile software for our clients. In 2.5 years we grew from 0 to 7 people. We are having fun, we build exciting stuff, we are profitable, we work from home (yay!), and we are happy since we are paid to do what we like to do.

But there is something that nags us. On the long term, we will have to do project after project after project after project. We can not grow, or at least not without hiring more people. And more people means less of a young dynamic startup culture and more bureaucracy. We can not scale. And although we like building things, we are never building our own things.

In September 2012, I took an important decision. Or rather, a challenge. Here it goes:

I will switch from a service company to a products company. By september 2013 I want to be break even purely on products.

WOOOOOOOOT. HOW? WHY?

What is life like in a service business?

In a service business, you trade a certain service for a certain amount of money. Consultants, dentists, doctors, lawyers, carpenters, programmers, kinesists, freelancers. They all trade their hours for money. Typically, they have an hourly rate. For 10$, 40$, 80$ or 250$ per hour, they will provide service ABC to company XYZ. Or they accept “fixed price” projects, which is nearly the same, since the fixed price is just the number of estimated hours times the hourly rate. (Note: fixed price projects are often worse than being paid per hour, since you have to estimate and commit your price upfront for an often not so clearly defined project scope. In most cases the scope is fuzzy and appears to be bigger than originally thought, but the price not.)

So, if you trade hours for money, what do you do to earn more?

Exactly, you work more hours!

But there are only so many hours in a day. So what do you do when you are at your limit of 12 hours per day?

Exactly, you hire an employee, so you can sell his or her hours!

And what do you have to do once you hire an employee?

Exactly, you have to make sure there is enough work in the pipeline to make sure this employee is not without work, since an employee without billable work cost you a lot of money. Time is ticking!

Bottom line is that your service business is growing in headcount, in revenue and in hours sold per day. But:

  • The projects pipeline is much harder to maintain. You have to make sure everyone is billable every hour. You have to deal with employee turnover, holidays, illness, company policies, new hires, urgencies, complaints, estimations, incidents, and so much more. There are much more things that need your attention.
  • None of these tasks are creative and fun, but they are all on your shoulders.
  • All of this extra worries for a little grow in profit.

Turnover in service companies grows in direct relationship with the headcount. And profit is a percentage of turnover. So profit grows (little by little) when your service company grows (and your agenda becomes much more busy).

There is a direct relation between time and profit. But since time does not scale, your profit will never scale.

IN A SERVICE BUSINESS, THE HARDER YOU WORK, THE MORE WEIGHT YOU PUT ON YOUR SHOULDERS AND THE MORE HEADACHES YOU ARE WILLING TO ACCEPT, THE MORE YOU EARN.

Hard work, weight, headaches for some extra peanuts? Doesn’t sound like a great deal, isn’t it?

Here below a graph of the profit growth of a typical service business over time, as the business grows and hires more employees.

In a service business, you are not investing your time. You are burning your time. Every last day of the month you have to:

  • pay salaries
  • find work for the next month to make sure that you’ll be able to pay salaries next month

Every first day of the month, the counter is reset to zero. You have to refill your agenda with billable days for the next month. And so on, and so on. You don’t own a company, you own a job. Congrats.

The challenge: switch to a product business

We challenged ourself in september 2012, 5 months ago, to be break even with products by september 2013.

What does that mean: “break even with products”?

In a product business, you do not sell your time for hours. Instead, you make a huuuuuuuuuuuuuuge (yes, that many U’s) upfront time investment in order to build something that can be sold over and over again. There is no direct relation between time and revenue or profit. Money keeps on rolling in, even if you take a little pauze. You don’t sell time for money, you sell something that you already have for money.

If your product price is 50$, and you sell 10 copies per month of it online, you would make 500$ per month. If one way or another (let’s say…good marketing) you get to selling 100 copies per month, you would make 5.000$ per month. Now imagine you can sell 1000 copies per month. Now, THAT SCALES, isn’t it? In a service company, scaling profit times 100 would mean to hire 100 times more employees. Good luck to plan in holidays and see your children grow up! :-)

This is the profit growth of a successful product, compared with the profit growth of a service business.

Note that in point “A”, you did invest a lot of time and money in your product, but you didn’t get any single $ yet for that time investment. You are in negative. As told before, launching a product is an upfront time investment. It takes a lot of upfront energy, time and motivation. But in point B your product starts paying itself back: it brings in as much money in as it costs per month. In point “B” you are break even.

Our primary goal is to be break even on products. That means: the monthly recurring revenue that our products bring in should be enough to cover monthly costs.

Why is break even a magic point for us?

It’s magic since it means that even with zero billable hours for several months in a row, we would survive. We would not be profitable, but we would not go bankrupt neither. We stay break even. But break even with PLENTY OF TIME to improve our products so our users will love them more. No duties. No trading time for money anymore. All time is be ours. We would be able to invest our time in more products or better products, in growing, in scaling. And without pressure, since bills are paid at the end of the month.

IF YOU CAN GET BREAK EVEN WITH PRODUCTS, YOU CAN AS WELL BECOME (VERY) PROFITABLE.

Once you are break even with your products, the hardest part is done. You are one step away from profitability. The number one primary goal of every product founder should be: break even.

So, will this work? Will it fail?

I don’t know. You will figure it out together with me…

But I now one thing for sure. I am so motivated on making this real, that I will do everything necessary to make it work. It might fail, it might work. But quite likely it will not completely fail. And with some luck (yes I know luck is not a strategy, don’t tell me) it might as well work out very good.

Over the next series of blogposts I will share my experiences with you. I’m going to be 100% transparent on all the steps I take and will document everything out on this blog.

Questions like:

  • how did you find your product idea?
  • how long did it take to build the first draft?
  • where are you now? how much MRR (monthly recurring revenue) do you make now?
  • what did you do wrong?
  • how did you market your product?
  • …and so on.
You’ll read everything in detail on this blog.

Stay tuned with me, subscribe to the RSS feed of this blog, or follow me on Twitter https://twitter.com/pietereer

Solve a burning pain and people will throw money at you

You are on holiday, in a warm, sunny country. A safari trip. You have been saving quite some money for this trip and you have been preparing this trip for several months.

The sun is setting. You are very tired, and since you are in the middle of nowhere and following the rhythm of nature, you set up your tent and go to sleep. You are exhausted. You close your eyes.

And…

BzzzzzzzzzzzZZZZzzzz…zzzZZZZZZzzzz…..zzzZZZZZT

Damn! A mosquito!

The whole damn night you hear that annoying sound right near your ear. Just when you think it’s gone you and you are about to fall asleep…again… BzzzzZZZZZZZzzzzZZT.

You didn’t sleep all night long. You are so tired. You are irritated. You feel a burning frustration and pain.

The second night, the same story. BZZZZZZ. You didn’t sleep, the second night in a row!

MAN! You spent all your money for this trip, you have been preparing it for so long, and now a stupid mosquito will f*ck up your holidays!

You are furious. Extremely irritated. You feel a BURNING PAIN!

OK, now let’s put this story on hold. So, what is the situation you are in?

You have a problem. A pain. A frustration. How much would you pay right now for a solution (a mosquito spray for example) to remove that pain? Exactly: A LOT OF MONEY! It doesn’t really matter anymore how much you actually have to pay: if someone selling mosquito sprays would appear out of nowhere, you would tell him to shut up and take your money for this god d*amn mosquito spray.

I see so many people coming up with imaginary solutions for imaginary problems. Auch. Unless you have millions of marketing budget to create demand for your product (=make people believe that they have a problem by advertising), you better solve a real problem.

You would be amazed how much people are willing to pay you if you take away their pain.

What problem does your product solve? What pain does your business take away from your customers?

Force the luck

Hi again!

Let’s talk about luck & entrepreneurship. The guys from Google are quite lucky, isn’t it? The right place (their garage), the right time, and the best of all: they had the right idea when they woke up that morning. Too bad for all the other entrepreneurs with less luck. They should have prayed more for unicorns.

Or not?

There is no such thing as “luck” in entrepreneurship. You have control over everything you do. Or don’t do. If you give up your job, invest your own money in your startup, decide to blog, to take care of your network, if you maintain a Twitter account, polish your website, you invest your free time in reading business books, if you go to conferences, give up holidays, you call your clients to ask how they are if you learn actively from your mistakes. Then what is the contribution of dumb luck in your succes?

Telling a successful entrepreneur that he or she is “lucky” is like telling Neil Armstrong he was lucky to be the first man on the moon. As if he woke up with a letter next to his pillow like “Dear Neil, we selected you as the lucky one to be the first man on the moon. Congrats!“. Or like telling Seth Godin that he is “lucky” to have 400K subscribers to his blog. It’s an offend. Seth has been writing a blog post every single day since January 2002. No single percentage of luck involved if you ask me.

What about people with the bad-luck syndrome? People who loose their car keys once a week, especially on crucial moments like days on which they would make a big deal? Bad luck, or a lack of organization? What about people who launch their third product in a row but don’t get any customers? Bad luck, or did they fail learning from their previous mistakes? What about people who are always busybusybusy but never book progress? Bad luck, or do they invest their time in the wrong things?

“I’m a greater believer in luck, and I find the harder I work the more I have of it” ― Thomas Jefferson

Instead of praying for little unicorns that will come and save you, force the luck. How? Just by doing. Acting. Trying. Some random examples:

  • I do speak on conferences. I often get new clients as a direct result from my presentation. Some of the deals I made a few years ago still bring in money today.
  • I blog. When I ask new clients how they did find me, often the answer goes like: “oh, I think the first time I heard about you was because a friend of mine tweeted an article you wrote“.
  • If a client signs up for one of our software products (more on our products soon on this blog, scout promise), I send them a personal mail asking how they do, if I can help, and how our software could help them. Every single client. Even if they don’t reply, often it means a lot. It means that we care about them and how our software and company could bring them value.

Any of the examples related with luck? Nope. Easy to do? Absolutely. Can anyone do it? Yup, even a monkey. Will unicorns do it for you? Nope, you’ll have to do it yourself…

What are your thoughts?

(Thanks for reading this blog. Tweet or like or share it = lots of karma for you.)

Automate your business (or life)

You can use your time for 2 things:

  • For fire killing: solving urgent problems, bugs, last minute schedule changes, chasing a new contract, bookkeeping, answering emails, handling calls, dealing with a random day to day flow of unpredictable events, sinking away in administrative duties and urgencies.
  • For working on procedures and putting systems in place in order to avoid fire killing: stepping out of the day to day rush, thinking on how you could set up rules in place so your life or business becomes an engine that runs on autopilot.

The first I call consuming time. It’s like consuming money. It gives instant happiness. You spend 10 minutes on something urgent, and hooray, it’s solved! Up to the next thing. And the next. And the next. And the next… The issue with this is that there will be a never ending stream of burning things, calls, persons, emails, issues, … that need your attention. If you keep on just consuming or burning your time for random urgencies, you or your business will never grow. You will be always the “master hero” jack-of-all-trades that has everyone’s respect, but no free time to enjoy life or to make any progress in your business.

Instead of consuming or burning your time, invest your time. Just like with investing money, investing time has an ROI (return on investment). Think wise about how you could organise and master your life and business. This is of course less instant. It’s an upfront investment, but with a return later on. By working out a clear and organized procedure to support your clients, you don’t solve the problem of the client that is calling you right now. So that particular urgency is still there. But with a clear, organized and documented procedure in place, spread across your company, all your future clients urgencies will be on auto pilot. Instead of handling support calls, text messages, emails and Twitter messages yourself in a random way, set up a centralized support email box across the company, with clear rules in place. Make this an engine. Define the rules of the game so clearly that there is no room for misunderstandings. For your clients: route them to this one central support email box. For your company: define who should handle which support request, how, what are the conventions, etc. Great, you are now on auto-pilot. Everyone is handling in the same way. There is less management or monitoring needed. You can even predict your workload and how things will evolve. You have more time for useful things (like investing in even more procedures).

Just like investing money, investing time is an upfront investment. But it pays itself back. It’s an elevator for growth, more free time, more money, confidence. It allows you to scale.

The support box example is just one of the so many areas where you can set up procedures. There are so many aspects in life and business that you could automate. The highest return on time investment is in recurring and simple tasks. Because they are recurring, you invest once, and benefit forever. Because they are simple, the rules of the game are short and clear. Client support, holiday requests, going to the store, healthy food habits, recurring payments, your email inbox, clients that call you late in the evening, a todo list, your agenda, your daily wake up routine, good sport habits, and so on. Don’t let them define your agenda.

With fire killing, you kill fires, but you never improve!